HEALTH: How to know HIV / AIDS is trying to enter your body And how to avoid it
This true life story of HIV patient, you need to read this article and learn.
I'm 25 Male. about 2 weeks ago, I started to get sick. I got flu, fever, night sweat TWICE, muscles pain all over my body (still present) , nausea, constant headache (still present) and constant pain in my neck,
also I found out this morning that I got rash on my back. Little reddish things on my back (it doesn't itchy or pain). I also lost about 5KG in just 2 weeks. I also still feel chills frequently. I get tired easily and short of breath. I sweat just when I'm exposed to sun for a few minutes.
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I know "this is it". I know that there couldn't be anything else but HIV ENTERING MY BODY. I have tried home-kit HIV test, It shows NEGATIVE but i know that , it's the period when home-kit HIV test cannot detect HIV in my blood because it is tested based on my immune system to HIV.
Most people don't know right away when they've been infected with HIV, but a short time later, they may have symptoms. This is when your body's immune system puts up a fight, typically within 2 to 6 weeks after you've gotten the virus. It's called acute retroviral syndrome or primary HIV infection.
The symptoms are similar to those of other viral illnesses, and they're often compared to the flu. They typically last a week or two and then completely go away.
If you didn't know you were infected with HIV earlier, you may realize it after you have some of these symptoms:
1. Being tired all of the time
2. Swollen lymph nodes in your neck or groin
3. Fever that lasts for more than 10 days
4. Night sweats
5. Unexplained weight loss
6. Purplish spots on your skin that don't go away
7. Shortness of breath
8. Severe, long-lasting diarrhea
9. Yeast infections in your mouth, throat, or va''gina
10. Bruises or bleeding you can't explain
People with AIDS who don't take medication only survive about 3 years, even less if they get a dangerous infection. But with the right treatment and a healthy lifestyle, you can live a long time.
Although there is no cure for HIV, medical treatment is available that significantly reduces the amount of the virus in the body to the point where it may become undetectable in the blood.
The amount of virus in a person's body is known as the viral load. An undetectable viral load means that the person with HIV is not infectious and that the virus is not able to damage their immune system.
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